Lisette Mojica, in her nine-page motion, asks Van Dyke’s attorneys and Special Prosecutor Joseph McMahon not to disseminate any Chicago Police Department and Independent Police Review Authority emails and attachments that are irrelevant to the fatal shooting of Laquan McDonald.

The city’s Office of Inspector General turned over 115,535 CPD emails and 124,655 IPRA emails without narrowing down the ones tied to the Van Dyke matter, the motion reads.

Many of those are protected by attorney-client privilege, are “work-protected material” and have nothing to do with the incident, according to the motion.

“I don’t mean to be facetious, but have you consulted with the mayor, because on June 3, 2016, Mayor Emanuel made a statement on transparency, the new policy of the City of Chicago,” Gaughan said.

“…I just want to make sure you’re not being inconsistent with the mayor’s statement.”

Van Dyke’s attorneys have been twice denied the Illinois Department of Children of Family Service records by a Juvenile Court judge. They have since asked Gaughan to reconsider Judge Patricia Martin’s past decisions.

Gaughan said he will review the material and rule later on whether the records are relevant.

Van Dyke, 38, is expected back in court Jan. 10. He is accused of shooting 17-year-old McDonald 16 times in October 2014, but wasn’t charged until last year, after a harrowing video of the incident, filmed by a dashboard-mounted camera, was released, prompting protests across the country.